Koch-funded Prop 23 Campaign Manufacturing Science

authordefault
on

In the latest example of polluter attempts to exert influence over science, the Koch-funded Pacific Research Institute was paid to manufacture another junk science โ€œstudyโ€ designed to lend credibility to Californiaโ€™s disastrous Proposition 23 ballot measure, an oil industry-backed effort to derail the stateโ€™s landmark AB 32 law to fight globalย warming.

The Yes on 23 campaign, a group launched and funded primarily by three oil companies โ€“ Valero Energy, Tesoro Corporation and Koch Industriesโ€™ subsidiary Flint Hills Resources – has been meddling in science, much to the liking of its oil industry bankrollers. ย Recent financial reports reveal the Yes on 23 campaign has raised more than $5.2 million in the past three months, mostly from the oilย companies.

The funding reports reveal payments of tens of thousands of dollars going to researchers at an industry front group well known for ginning up misleading research suggesting that Californiaโ€™s clean energy efforts would killย jobs.ย 

According to the financial disclosures, the oil-backed campaign paid Pacific Research Institute $40,000, no doubt intended to bolster its efforts to attack Californiaโ€™s AB 32ย law.ย 

Pacific Research Institute is also funded by Exxon and by the Koch family foundations, which have funneled hundreds of thousands of dollars into the front groupโ€™s coffers in recentย years.

The reports also reveal that a supposedly independent โ€œeconomist,โ€ Thomas Tanton, received $35,000 to produce a โ€œstudyโ€ suggesting that Californiaโ€™s efforts to reduce global warming pollution would hurt local economies and communities. ย Tanton is far from โ€œindependent,โ€ in fact he is a consultant to the oil and gas industry, serves as Senior Fellow of Energy Studiesย with the Pacific Research Institute [PDF], contributes regular columns for the Heartland Institute, and was a former VP at the Institute for Energy Research, another group heavily funded by oil and gasย interests.ย 

The oil-backed Yes on 23 campaign is also trying to convince voters of color that their jobs are at risk, and that they are merely protecting the interests of the poor rather than protecting their dirty energy profits. ย Many of their ads seek to appeal to the Latino, African-American and Asian-Pacific Islander communities that comprise 58 percent of Californiaโ€™sย population.

Californiaโ€™s clean energy economy is growing faster than in any other state, largely due to the passage of AB 32, the Global Warming Solutions Act, which opened the doors for clean energyย growth.ย 

But it seems that the Koch brothers, like many of the rest of the entrenched oil and coal industry barons, will stop at nothing in order to protect the status quo fossil fuel addiction that is saddling the global economy and wrecking theย climate.

Related Posts

on

High demand for wild-caught species to feed farmed salmon and other fish is taking nutritious food away from low-income communities in the Global South.

High demand for wild-caught species to feed farmed salmon and other fish is taking nutritious food away from low-income communities in the Global South.
Analysis
on

Premier Danielle Smith can expect new tariffs, fewer revenue streams, and a provincial deficit brought on by lowered oil prices.

Premier Danielle Smith can expect new tariffs, fewer revenue streams, and a provincial deficit brought on by lowered oil prices.
on

Jeremy Clarkson spreads well-worn conspiracy theory that casts inheritance farm tax policy as plot to โ€œreplace farmers with migrantsโ€.

Jeremy Clarkson spreads well-worn conspiracy theory that casts inheritance farm tax policy as plot to โ€œreplace farmers with migrantsโ€.
on

Premier Danielle Smith declared sheโ€™s pursuing โ€˜every legal optionโ€™ in her fight against Trudeauโ€™s federal proposal to curb emissions.

Premier Danielle Smith declared sheโ€™s pursuing โ€˜every legal optionโ€™ in her fight against Trudeauโ€™s federal proposal to curb emissions.